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      Lack of interaction between peripheral injection of CCK and obestatin in the regulation of gastric satiety signaling in rodents.

      Peptides
      Animals, Cholecystokinin, pharmacology, Drug Interactions, Eating, drug effects, Gastric Emptying, physiology, Injections, Intraperitoneal, Male, Mice, Mice, Inbred C57BL, Organ Culture Techniques, Peptide Hormones, Rats, Rats, Sprague-Dawley, Satiety Response, Stomach, innervation, Vagus Nerve

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          Abstract

          Obestatin is a new peptide for which anorexigenic effects were recently reported in mice. We investigate whether peripheral injection of obestatin or co-injection with cholecystokinin (CCK) can modulate food intake, gastric motor function (intragastric pressure and emptying) and gastric vagal afferent activity in rodents. Obestatin (30, 100 and 300 microg/kg, i.p.) did not influence cumulative food intake for the 2h post-injection in rats or mice nor gastric emptying in rats. In rats, obestatin (300 microg/kg) did not modify CCK (1 microg/kg, i.p.)-induced significant decrease in food intake (36.6%) and gastric emptying (31.0%). Furthermore, while rats injected with CCK (0.3 microg/kg, i.v.) displayed gastric relaxation, no change in gastric intraluminal pressure was elicited by obestatin (300 microg/kg, i.v.) pre- or post-CCK administration. In in vitro rat gastric vagal afferent preparations, 20 units that had non-significant changes in basal activity after obestatin at 30 microg responded to CCK at 10 ng by a 182% increase. These data show that obestatin neither influences cumulative food intake, gastric motility or vagal afferent activity nor CCK-induced satiety signaling.

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